| |
Reviews for
GHCD 2256/57
Toscanini All American Concert 1941/2
Fanfare July/August 2005
(2 CDs: 107:08) Live:
11/1/1942;³ 4/2/1944⁴,
ALL-AMERICAN
• Arturo Toscanini, cond;
NBC SO; Earl Wild (pn)¹; Oscar Levant (pn)²
LOEFFLER
Memories of My
Childhood.3
CRESTON
Choric Dance No. 2.3
GOULD
A
Lincoln Legend³.
GERSHWIN
Piano
Concerto in F;2
⁴
Rhapsody in B/ue¹.3.
MIGNONE
Festa das
Igrejas⁴
This recent reissue
makes available two of Toscanini's broadcast concerts with the NBC Symphony that
documented the maestro's attention to American music, which was notoriously
limited, in comparison with that of such conductors as Leopold Stokowski, Serge
Koussevitzky, Eugene Ormandy, and others. The release is likely to hold
considerably more interest for Toscanini specialists and collectors of
historical performances than for American music
aficionados,
even though the pieces
by Gould and Mignone are not otherwise available. This is partly because those
two pieces are of limited artistic value, and partly because the sound quality
of much of the material, as captured here, significantly compromises whatever
interest is generated by the music and the performances.
It doesn't require a
prophet to suppose that the Gershwin performances are the chief draw here. The
Rhapsody in
Blue features
not only the 27-year-old Earl Wild, but also boasts Benny Goodman in the
all-important clarinet solos, one of which is marred by a most indiscreet
squeak. From my standpoint-and I should confess here to being one of the few
music-lovers who is
not
an admirer of this
repertoire favorite-this grim, tight-lipped reading holds only documentary
historical interest, imparting little or nothing in the way of interpretive
insight. On the other hand, Oscar Levant's similarly taut rendition of the
Concerto in F-the only work of Gershwin's for which I can generate any
enthusiasm-is far more effective. By 1944, Levant virtually owned this work, and
the interpretation is clearly as much-or more-his as Toscanini's. It is
brilliantly executed-sizzling with energy, while not lacking either tenderness
or flexibility of phrasing. The sound quality is quite tolerable here as well.
(Should there be Toscanini fans out there who are unacquainted with Oscar Levant
[1906-1972], let me summarize: a brilliant pianist and composer, he had been
closely associated with Gershwin and was regarded as his most authoritative
interpreter. However, his career-which at its height embraced the worlds of both
Carnegie Hall and Hollywood-was cut short by serious psychiatric illness an
which he then capitalized, creating a media persona as a shamelessly
self-mocking raconteur. "There is a fine line between genius and insanity," he
Said. "I have erased that line.")
Beyond the Gershwin
pieces, the repertoire here will strike the mainstream listener as little more
than historical footnotes, but enthusiasts of the esoteric may find something
worthy of raising an eyebrow or two. Charles Martin Loeffler (1861-1935) was
better known during his lifetime than he is today. Born in Alsace-Lorraine, he
came to the United States at the age of 20. A fine violinist who had studied
with Joachim, he earned his living as a member of the Boston Symphony Orchestra
for 20 years, remaining an active and respected figure in Boston's musical life.
An aristocratic and highly cultivated individual, he regarded composition as his
primary occupation, and his works-largely impressionistic in style-were held in
high esteem by his contemporaries. He produced some of the finest music written
in America at the turn of the 20th century. As a child, Loeffler had lived for
three years in the Ukraine. In 1924, he composed the tone poem,
Memories of My
Childhood,
which he subtitled, "Life in a Russian Village." It is an appealing work,
alternately solemn and playful, that leavens its impressionistic harmonic
textures with the modal chorale style associated with Russian liturgical music.
Alternate recorded performances include a 1936 New York Philharmonic broadcast
conducted by Sir John Barbirolli (available an Volume I of "An American
Celebration") and a 1954 Mercury LP (MG 50085) with Howard Hanson conducting the
Eastman-Rochester Symphony Orchestra. The former, of course, suffers from
similarly compromised sound quality, while the latter-preferable for its
superior sound-has never been reissued an CD.
A work of similar
aesthetic import is
Festa das Igrejas
(translated here as
"Symphonic Impressions of Four Old Brazilian Churches") by the Brazilian
composer Francisco Mignone (1897-1986). This is a picturesque if blandly
innocuous composition in a Respighian vein, accented by a strongly folk-like
melos. Its representation here is somewhat disadvantageous, as the murky sound
quality vitiates the element of orchestral color, which is its strongest aspect.
Near the end of his
life, Paul Creston identified Toscanini's performance of his
Choric Dance No.
2 as one of the peak
moments of his career. However, from the standpoint of a CD listener, this
veiled and murky representation of the five-minute excerpt is of questionable
interest and value. Among the composer's most appealing and frequently performed
works, Two
Choric Dances
(1938) is overdue for a
modern recording. Although other recorded performances have floated around the
periphery, the most effective was on an all-American Capitol LP (P-8245)
featuring Vladimir Golschmann conducting the Concert Arts Orchestra-a recording
that has never been reissued an CD. Given the 1950s recorded sound, a comparison
of that performance with Toscanini's favors the former an every dimension.
Admirers of Morton Gould
may find this release noteworthy for the only recorded representation ofA
Lincoln Legend.
Like its
natural musical analogue, Copland's
Lincoln Portrait,
Gould's 16-minute
symphonic impression was composed during World War II, when patriotic concerns
were in the air. Gould's piece was actually completed before Copland's, although
its premiere, captured here, took place several months after that of the other.
A comparison of the two works provides ample evidence for the perennial
popularity of the one, as opposed to the total obscurity of the other. Putting
aside the matter of the spoken component unique to the Copland, both works
attempt to integrate American tunes and quasi-Americana phraseology into some
sort of symphonic entity. While Copland devised for his nationally flavored
works a modestly spare musical language that served as an apt medium for the
often-simple melodic material, Gould typically subjected such material-sometimes
ditties of unredeemable banality (as in this piece, "The Old Gray Mare")-to
drastically incongruous contrapuntal, harmonic, and rhythmic complexities.
During the less active moments, the piece meanders aimlessly through terrain
charted by Roy Harris. At one time, Copland's Americana vein was characterized
as "synthetic" by less sympathetic commentators, but the passage of time has
confirmed his magic touch with such material, while Gould's approach seems to
embody that characterization ever more keenly.
I must conclude by
stating that this reissue gives little evidence of Toscanini's undeniable genius
as a musical interpreter having been engaged by these two programs (although I
can readily call to mind some American works for which his gifts, alas, might
have been ideally suited). Recommended chiefly to historically oriented
collectors.
Walter Simmons
MusicWeb Monday February 02 04
Arturo
TOSCANINI: All-American Concerts
Charles Martin LOEFFLER (1861-1912):
‘Memories of my childhood’ (Life in a Russian Village) [13’06")
Paul CRESTON (1906-1985): Choric Dance No.
2, Op. 17 [4’45"]
Morton GOULD (1913-1996): A Lincoln Legend
[16’18"]
George GERSHWIN (1898-1937): Rhapsody in
Blue* [16’05"]
*Earl Wild (piano); Benny Goodman (clarinet) NBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by
Arturo Toscanini
Recorded in Studio 8H, Radio City, New York on 1 November 1942 AAD
Francesco MIGNONE (1897-1986): Festa das
igrejas [20’54"]
George GERSHWIN Piano Concerto in F**
[30’41"]
** Oscar Levant (piano)
NBC
Symphony Orchestra conducted by Arturo Toscanini
Recorded in Studio 8H, Radio City, New York on 2 April 1944 AAD
GUILD
HISTORICAL GHCD 2256/7 [53’27"+53’47"]
The sort of repertoire listed above is not commonly associated with Toscanini so
it’s good to hear him in something different, and enterprising of Guild to make
these recordings available. Both derive from Toscanini’s hour-long radio
broadcasts for NBC from Studio 8H and each disc contains a complete concert. As
is Guild’s custom, the interlinking continuity announcements have been retained.
This is something I rather like as it imparts a period feel but if you dislike
such intrusions, don’t be put off; all the announcements are brief, none lasting
above 50 seconds. For those unfamiliar with this series, the recordings derive
from the collection of Richard Blaine Gardner who was Toscanini’s engineer and
editor of choice at RCA Victor. Gardner received the tapes from either Toscanini
himself or from the Maestro’s son, Victor. Subsequently Gardner made the
recordings available to Richard Caniell who oversaw their restoration. Mr.
Caniell says in a brief note accompanying this release that it is uncertain
whether the present recordings derive from line-checks or air-checks. His
supposition is that the 1942 concert is from an air-check and that its companion
derives from a collector’s private disc recording. In general, the CD transfers
have been well managed although inevitably some surface noise is audible and
some climaxes sound a mite congested. Apart from the Gershwin items the other
pieces may be as unfamiliar to you as they were to me. Actually, I had heard one
of the non-standard items before. The work by Loeffler is included in a 1936
Barbirolli reading in the New York Philharmonic’s substantial set, An
American Celebration. I’m afraid I found it rather a bore then and
Toscanini’s account doesn’t persuade me either. Loeffler, though born in Alsace,
spent some of his childhood years in Ukraine (and in Hungary and Switzerland
also) before emigrating to the USA in 1881. In this short symphonic poem,
composed in 1923, he depicts a variety of things familiar to him from his
Ukrainian days including Russian peasant songs, the Yourod’s Litany prayer,
fairy tales, dance songs and, at the end, the death of Vasinka, an elderly
peasant storyteller. It’s pictorial music and pleasant enough but not
desperately memorable, I think, though Toscanini does what he can for it. In
fairness to the composer perhaps there is more to this music than I have
discerned for it won first prize in 1924 at the Chicago North Shore Festival.
This success led to it receiving a première from the Chicago Symphony under
Frederick Stock and Stock revived it a few months later. So three major
conductors evidently thought it worth an airing. The Creston piece was new to me
but I found it as attractive as those other works of his that have come my way.
Our editor, Rob Barnett, who contributes the very useful liner notes, is right
to draw attention to the importance that dance played in Creston’s music. This
short piece, first heard in 1939, flaunts its dance inspiration. It is a busy,
even vehement piece for full orchestra, founded on propulsive rhythms, which are
driven on by what I take to be a large-ish percussion section and an orchestral
piano. The assertive opening sounds a bit brash in the acoustic of Studio 8H but
maybe the composer, who was present for the performance, would not have been
displeased. Certainly he must have relished a virtuoso conductor and orchestra
expounding his music. The work by Morton Gould, which I’d not previously heard,
was actually receiving its first performance, in the presence of the composer,
at this concert. I’ve acquired several other works by Gould in my collection
over the years but I’m bound to say that in general, while I find them
immaculately crafted and pleasant to listen to none of them has struck me as
having a particularly distinctive musical profile. A Lincoln Portrait is
no different. The radio announcer suggests that the structure of Gould’s work
might have been inspired by the title of a biography of Lincoln, Prairie
Years, War Years. The piece begins with evocative open-air music, not unlike
Copland in his Appalachian Spring vein (here surface swishes are rather
intrusive, I’m afraid). Various American folk songs are recollected. In the
central section, which is more robust, old war songs are quoted in a marching
band style before, around 8’27" the music slows again and more old American
songs are quoted, this time with more vigour than at the very beginning before a
tranquil, string-dominated close which seems to bring the music back full
circle. Though technically very assured it’s all rather homespun and didn’t
lodge in my memory, I fear. Incidentally, at 5’42", just where the central
section begins, there’s what, after several hearings, I can only think is a
momentary dropout in the recording but it only lasts for about a bar’s length.
The highlight of this concert must have been the performance of the Gershwin
Rhapsody. The soloist was the young American virtuoso, Earl Wild, just a few
weeks shy of his twenty-seventh birthday. Another celebrated American musician
was involved too, for the announcer tells us that he has spied the "smiling
countenance" of Benny Goodman in the ranks of the orchestra. Apparently the
Maestro himself had invited him to play the first clarinet part. Goodman
launches the work stylishly although there’s an unfortunate cracked note right
at the end of his solo. Actually, I wonder if Goodman’s real value was a bit
more discreet? A bit later on the rhythms around 3’47" are a little foursquare,
though the NBC brass, like all good American brass players, can bend the notes
well enough, but there in the background you can distinctly hear Goodman’s
idiomatically wailing clarinet egging them on. Perhaps his presence in the ranks
fired the other players. It has to be said that Toscanini’s rhythms can seem a
little plain but this, I suspect, may be less to do with an unidiomatic approach
from him and more to do with the difficulties of getting a full orchestra to
swing. We should remember that the work was then only 18 years old so a
performing tradition was still being established. By the late twentieth century
the demands of modern composers had made orchestral musicians incomparably more
flexible but in the 1940s it can’t have been easy for the NBC players, or any of
their peers, to switch from, say, Grieg to Gershwin. It’s interesting to read
two contemporary critiques of this concert that are reproduced in the booklet.
In the New York Times Olin Downes avers, rather portentously, "the
Maestro might have spent his life with the denizens of Tin Pan Alley for any
backwardness that he showed in his comprehension of an apparent enthusiasm for
the American idiom." However, an anonymous reviewer in Musical America in
an evident oblique reference to Toscanini commented "Mr. Wild, wearing a Navy
uniform, all but stole the show with his spectacular playing in those episodes
that permitted him to go his own (and Gershwin’s) way." I’d certainly agree that
Wild gives a pretty fine performance. However, despite his extravagantly gifted
pianism his reading here is not as spontaneous as I’ve heard from others. This
may be indicative of a lack of rapport with his conductor. Just as likely a
cause, however, is a lack of adequate rehearsal time due to wartime
contingencies. No matter, he displays great virtuosity with athletic fingerwork
and rhythmic flexibility. The romantic "big tune" (at 10’38"), though perhaps a
touch broad for some tastes, is given the full treatment by all concerned.
There’s more Gershwin in the second concert and that programme also contains a
substantial rarity in the shape of Festa das igrejas by the Brazilian
composer, Francesco Mignone. This work, the Portuguese title of which I think
roughly translates as "Festival of Churches" was another recent composition at
the time, having been begun in 1939. The announcer tells the audience that the
piece is a "Symphonic Impression of four old Brazilian churches." More than this
I cannot tell you. However the piece, which plays continuously is a most
effective one. It is colourful, atmospheric and resourcefully orchestrated for
what sounds like a large band (including, at the end, an organ; here a most
egregious and synthetic electric instrument is used). There’s abundant rhythmic
vitality and, to borrow Rob Barnett’s felicitous phrase several "voluptuous
eruptions of sound." Mr. Barnett is surely right in pointing out in his notes
the similarities with Respighi (and how appropriate, since Mignone was the son
of an Italian flautist and spent some years studying in Italy.) The
compositional language is firmly tonal but dissonance is employed to good
effect. The most substantial section of the piece (between 10’35" and 17’03"),
depicting what I take to be the third church, is eerily reminiscent of the Aria
from Villa-Lobos’s Bachianas Brasileiras No. 5. The work ends in an
exuberant riot of orchestral colour and syncopated rhythms and here the link
with Respighi is especially pertinent. I wouldn’t claim this work to be a
masterpiece by any means but I enjoyed it very much and am glad to have made its
acquaintance. Toscanini and his musicians can be heard to do it proud despite
the sonic limitations. Back to Gershwin for the final item with Oscar Levant
(1906-1972) as soloist in the F major Concerto. In the first movement (where
surface noise briefly obtrudes into Levant’s first solo) the performance is good
(and Levant himself is excellent) but here, more than in the Rhapsody I
missed a sense of verve and rhythmic élan, especially in the more
up-tempo passages. The last degree of freedom and of buoyancy in the rhythms is
lacking though conductor and soloist drive the movement to an exciting
conclusion. The famous, evocative trumpet solo in the slow movement (truly,
music of The City) is well done though I can’t escape the feeling that other
conductors might have encouraged more ‘bending’ of the notes. When he enters
Levant is decisive and the quicker central section, which the soloist leads, has
a good deal of bounce. The finale is played for all it’s worth and makes for a
rousing conclusion. No wonder the audience goes wild. This wouldn’t be a first
choice for this concerto but it’s an enjoyable performance with an excellent
soloist in Oscar Levant. At the risk of repeating myself, it’s also of
documentary importance as a part of the establishment of the performance
tradition of this work, which had been written as recently as 1925. In summary,
a fascinating pair of CDs, showing one of the twentieth century’s most
celebrated conductors in a less familiar light. The music is uneven in quality
but all is worth hearing and the performances are of the high standard you’d
expect. The recordings inevitably betray their age but Mr. Caniell and his
colleagues have done their considerable best with them and at no time does the
recorded sound mar enjoyment to any serious degree. Documentation is up to
Guild’s usual high standards. An issue which all those interested in twentieth
century Americana should try to hear and which will be self-recommending to
acolytes of Toscanini.
John Quinn
MusicWeb Monday January 12 04
Arturo
Toscanini – All American
Charles Martin LOEFFLER (1861-1912)
Memories of my Childhood (Life in a Russian Village) (1923)
Paul CRESTON (1906-1985)
Choric Dance No. 2 Op. 17 (1939)
Morton GOULD (1913-1996)
A Lincoln Legend (1941)
George GERSHWIN (1898-1937)
Rhapsody in Blue (1924, orch. Grofé 1926 rev. 1942)
Piano Concerto in F (1925)
Francisco MIGNONE (1897-1986)
Festa das igrejas
NBC Broadcast commentaries included
Earl
Wild (piano) and Benny Goodman (clarinet) in the Rhapsody in Blue
Oscar Levant (piano) in the Concerto in F
Recorded at an NBC concert on 1 November 1942 except the Mignone and the
Gershwin Concerto in F which were recorded at an NBC concert on 2 April 1944
GUILD
MGHCD 2256/7 [2 CDs: 107.08]
Derived
from two NBC concerts given in November 1942 and April 1944 these all-American
concerts (given that Loeffler was born in Alsace and Mignone in Sao Paulo)
demonstrate the range of Toscanini’s enthusiasms and expertise. We get an
invigorating slice of his fringe repertoire in recordings that presumably derive
from discs supervised by Richard Gardner, a favoured recording engineer of
Toscanini’s. They sound very well indeed with some exceptional spatial detail
audible, not least in the earlier concert. Allied to which the repertoire ranges
from cantilena to melodrama and back again and makes for a satisfying programme.
Loeffler’s
tone poem is peasant dark with an admixture of Russian threnody to which we can
add Mussourgskian surge and a sense of evocative romanticism; maybe also a sly
reference to Volga Boatmen. Its last movement, commemorating a death, is eerie
in the extreme and beautifully extrapolated by Toscanini. Paul Creston’s Choric
Dance No. 2 opens quite melodramatically and soon explores rhythmic implications
with concentration and vivacity; more an exercise than a totally convincing
piece but certainly bracing. This was the première of Morton Gould’s A Lincoln
Legend, a piece that opens with contemplative string writing but soon introduces
a raft of quotations (John Brown’s Body among a number) in a determinedly vulgar
melange – at least I think it’s determinedly vulgar. After the tumultuous
Americana we return to the more reflective intimacies that had ushered us in.
The 1942
concert and the first disc conclude here with Rhapsody in Blue in a performance
given by Earl Wild. He was the youngest soloist to have played with the
orchestra and always wondered why he and not a raft of others had been selected.
Wild reminisced elsewhere that he later found out that Toscanini used to listen
in to NBC’s chamber concerts on Sunday mornings and had heard Wild there – a
more or less humble NBC staffer catapulted to fame. The Rhapsody comes complete
with a celebrity clarinettist in the shape of Benny Goodman, soon to test
classical waters with the Budapest Quartet but not yet a student of the
legendary English player Reginald Kell. His nervousness shows with a fluffed
note at a registral change but it’s salutary to hear Goodman’s wailing opening
bars. Toscanini unfolds during the performance and Wild is fine though not as
idiomatic as he was later to become (especially with Fiedler); the ending is
magnificent though and properly conclusive.
Mignone’s
Festa das igrejas evokes the solemn simplicity of Brazilian religious
contemplation before unleashing fiesta drama with buoyant parts for piano and
bass pizzicati. Mignone certainly introduces lashings of colour, alongside the
rapt passages for solo strings and the brassy processionals and fanfares, ending
the piece in pearly – maybe gaudy – grandiosity and rambunctious Christmas
festivities. It’s played here with dollops of wit and rhythmic drive. The 1944
concert ends with the Concerto in F with Oscar Levant as soloist. Levant had
first worked with Toscanini the previous year and had pointed out something in
the score of the Concerto in F to the conductor. According to Levant’s memoirs
the Italian sniffed a bit and said "Thatta poor boy…he was a-sick" and that was
that. I’ve read that there was considerable antipathy between soloist and
conductor, but Levant was generous to Toscanini in his autobiographies and said
his accompaniment in the Gershwin was "truly remarkable." There are perhaps one
or two moments when one feels Levant chaffing somewhat but it’s a cohesive
performance and very well recorded.
Imagine my
frustration on reading the booklet notes that in the first sentence contain the
names of American conductors previously unknown to me – John Barnett and Richard
Bales amongst them – and the feeling of piqued animosity thus engendered towards
the writer. He turns out to be Rob Barnett, editor of this site. There’s no
place for sycophancy here but he writes with his accustomed blend of authority,
energy, adjectival incandescence and the unearthing of unusual nuggets in a
style that has come to be known as Barnettian. It caps a fruitful and splendidly
enjoyable double from Guild.
Jonathan Woolf
Classical Net Wednesday October 15 03
-
Charles Martin
Loeffler:
'Memories of my childhood' (Life in a Russian Village)
-
Paul Creston:
Choric Dance #2, op. 17
-
Morton Gould:
A Lincoln Legend
-
George Gershwin:
Rhapsody in Blue, Concerto in F *
-
Francesco Mignone:
Festa igrejas
Benny Goodman,
clarinet
Earl Wild, piano
* Oscar Levant, piano
NBC Symphony Orchestra/Arturo Toscanini
Guild GHCD2256/7 107m ADD Rec: 1941/2
Guild's memorable
Toscanini series continues apace with an intriguing all-American programme of
works that reveal the maestro's intrinsic capacity and hunger for variety.
The rarely heard
Loeffler work is a gem of beauty with a characteristically expansive opening and
a rumbustious Russian dance as a Finale. This finds Toscanini on top form with
the NBC responding alertly to his fast speeds.
Creston and Gould also
receive the Toscanini touch especially in the mélange of the 'Lincoln Legend'.
The party continues with Gershwin's classic 'Rhapsody in Blue' finding Benny
Goodman and earl Wild in inspired mood.
I was unaware of
Mignone's egregiously titled 'Festa des igrejas' but this is a work of great
beauty and also conjures up vast vistas of the Texas Hill Country in mind. This
is an important work that should enjoy revivals much more often. Levant and
Toscanini round off proceedings with a suitably fired up rendition of the
Gershwin Piano Concerto that also deserves special mention.
The
remastering is of high quality with sound of quite amazing quality for 1942.
The pieces may
not seem to suit Toscanini's temperament to the fore but listeners will be
enthralled by these great performances of American music.
Gerald Fenech

Page revised 28.04.06
|